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23.01.2022 Government Health dept (Covid-19) Answers to questions https://www.healthdirect.gov.au//hotspots-and-case-loc/vic



13.01.2022 Antisocial personality disorder - Criteria's & Features According to the DSM- 5, antisocial personality disorder is defined as [a] pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others occurring since the age 15 years, as indicated by three (or more) of the following: Failure to conform to social norms concerning lawful behaviours, as indicated by repeatedly performing acts that are grounds for arrest....Continue reading

12.01.2022 Psychopaths are different to other disorders The word ‘psycho’ means deceased mind and ‘path’ means mind, spirit or soul and ‘path’ is suffering or disease in the Greek pathos. Personality disorders cover 40 to 60% of all diagnosed mental disorders. Typical disorders:... Paranoid irrational, suspicion and mistrust. Schizoid detached from social relationships Schizotypal extreme discomfort with social interaction. Dramatic disorders: Antisocial disregard for others, lack of empathy and manipulative behaviour. Borderline instability in self -image, behaviour and relationships. Histrionic attention seeking behaviour. Narcissistic need for admiration and lack of empathy. Anxious disorders: Avoidant feelings of inadequacy and extreme sensitivity Dependent need for care from other people. Obsessive-compulsive rigid conformity to rules and perfectionism. Hare’s psychopathy checklist has a maximum score of 40. People usually average a score between 3 and 6. Non psychopathic criminals average between 16 and 22. A score of over 25 in the UK or over 30 in the USA is regarded as a positive diagnoses of psychopathy. I need to state here that there is no diagnosis for psychopathy in the DSM. and I get it that most of us would not describe them as mentally normal. They don’t however suffer from hallucinations, are not anxious or compulsive and don’t hear voices, they do not however show remorse for their victims. Psychopaths often like having multiple sexual partners (often at the same time but without the others knowing, like to use a greater amount of drugs and do not fear negative consequences. Psychopaths fear conditioning. Winning can be nice if you’re an empath but its fantastic to win if you’re a psychopath. Psychopaths have a strong behavioural activated system and are much less concerned about punishment. It is rare for a psychopath to become depressed because they thrive on the challenge to be dominant. In behavioural games including looking at different shapes and colors a psychopath will only care about what they got right and will not focus or be concerned about the one’s that were incorrect an empath will. Even if the rules change and become harder, e.g. match the shapes and include matching the colour, an empath will slow down, but a psychopath will remain the same speed or even get faster to get more correct and will not think about the ones they got incorrect. This can also be a factor at work from a psychopathic manager, if money is only looked at and the safety of staff is not a factor to be concerned about. Additionally a psychopath can find it difficult to change their direction and resistant to change their response.

05.01.2022 Working with Psychopaths. Psychopaths confuse the hell out of normal people. People tend to worry about how to deal with them rather than running our own lives.... A Psychopath can tie us in knots for months, years or even decades causing emotional and often financial harm that we are unlikely to ever recover from unless we leave and gain support from a profession. A psychopaths lack of empathy is the key to understanding why they are so dangerous. They gravitate towards certain industries and positions of power and they usually get them because psychopathic traits are often very close to what we look for in leaders. We have changed our society to be the perfect breeding ground for psychopaths. We have changed from societal rules and collective cultures that have kept them in check to now individually is the highest common denominator. And profit is more important than safety or health. A psychopathic boss can drive away their best workers, become obsessive with micromanagement and be completely absent on other things, eg. Empathetic feelings towards others, not want to explain how to do something but will advise the order and not not care about the consequences of others, when they do not know about the task, they will dismiss them rather than want to show them. A psychopath can be meddling by always changing things and not creating any clear direction. They create in house fighting and take away harmony and focus in the workplace. A psychopath will deflect blame onto others and staff would be fired or leave the business and their decisions can be made on impulse with very little input from others. They have favourites (those that support and do not speak against their ruling). Staff that are favourites still have to walk on a fine line because it can be removed in an instant. Psychopathic traits are included in both a sociopath and a person suffering from narcissistic disorder yet both can differ. A sociopath can become a little more dangerous because they will not move away from someone if they cannot suck all the empathy from a person. They will continue to fight for clear domination of anyone they feel is a threat to them, and that includes their people on the same level as them and above them. When they are looking at employing someone it is about how much the applicant likes the boss at the interview rather than what they know.



01.01.2022 The charm of a psychopath A psychopath is charming in front of a person they chose, because they focus on what they can get form the person they are talking to rather than the possibility of rejection. They are also impulsive because rewards loom larger than punishments and so they see little point in delaying gratification. A psychopath needs stimulation (are easily bored) because the ‘need for speed’ is great as they get a significant greater reward from risk than the rest ...of us do. A psychopath has a grandiose sense of self-worth because they don’t remember negative experiences, e.g. they will not remember asking 99 girls out and their response being no, just the one response being yes. I know this paints a picture of the psychopath as an impulsive, focused reward chasing, risk-ignoring go-getter with an extreme lack of empathy to others and may seem to the empath that I am being negative. I am not however; these blogs in regards to the psychopath are hopefully education to help understand people around them, whether they live or work with a psychopath to understand them more rather than feel the hurt as much because they will not do anything different. Remember we can all lack something and these blogs that I am writing on the Psychopath are not for Psychopaths to read because they will not see anything to grow from or lack a part of. A matter of fact anyone can suffer any of the areas on discussion and not be a psychopath. A Psychopath lacks empathy towards others and please do not place autistic people within this stream as it is unfair, unprofessional and unfound and is based on a different criteria.

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